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In Search of the Shakespearean IdealWilliam Shakespeare is undoubtedly the world's greatest dramatist - is it any wonder myriad opera composers have turned to his works for inspiration? Cynthia Greenwood goes back to the Shakespearean roots of Berlioz's Beatrice and Benedict and Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
Shakespeare’s plays have inspired more than 200 operas, and it is not surprising that much of the opera canon is indebted to the poetry and humanism of the poet and player from Stratford-upon-Avon. Composers from Rossini to Vaughan -Williams have been captivated by Shakespeare’s complex and universal portraits and their puzzling ambiguity; the grand soliloquies uttered by kings, villains and fools; the multiplicity of viewpoints that belie a single authorial voice; and the multi-layered plots that evoke the ironic, the comic and the tragic within a single work. In particular, Hector Berlioz and Benjamin Britten, who helped define the operatic sensibilities of their respective centuries, revered Shakespeare’s poetry and humanistic representation. Berlioz’s Beatrice and Benedict derived from Shakespeare’s mature comedy Much Ado About Nothing. Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream is based on Shakespeare’s early comedy of the same name. In creating these works both composers were drawn to specific qualities considered uniquely “Shakespearean.” |
Books and Selected ArticlesFilm Review
A Review of Director Roland Emmerich's Film, Anonymous, About Edward de Vere and William Shakespeare
Book Review
A review of James Shapiro's Contested Will: Who Wrote Shakespeare?
A review of Jonathan Bate's Soul of the Age: A Biography of the Mind of William Shakespeare
The Age of Shiva: A Bittersweet Tale of a Troubled Marriage
Theatre criticism
A look at the Shakespearean roots of two great operas - Beatrice and Benedict, by Hector Berlioz, and A Midsummer Night's Dream, by Benjamin Britten
Playbill Arts Feature
A Look at the Heroines of Two Great Operas
Theatre; literary criticism
Everything you’d ever want to know about Shakespeare’s most popular and frequently performed plays.
Essay - History of Opera
A look at The Coronation of Poppea and the beginnings of opera
Arts-related Investigative Report
When Kilgore College staged Tony Kushner’s Angels in America, administrators learned there were limits to a liberal education in East Texas. |